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Posts Tagged ‘Mexico’

November 19th, 2010 - 4:00 pm § in Around Town

Unregistered Nursing

Give me a syringe and call me a doctor, or at least a nurse. It seems after a six dollar visit to the doctor last week, I became one step closer to my nursing degree — if I ever want to get one. The doctor asked my tonsil-swollen husband if he wanted medicine in injection [...][...]

November 5th, 2010 - 4:00 pm § in Careers, Good Ideas, In the Field, Mexico, Social Entrepreneurship

On Coffee and Marriage

Starting a business is like learning to ride a bike for the first time. Starting a business with your spouse of not-quite two years is like riding a bike shoeless with a burning candle in one hand. Starting a business in another country is, well, beyond similes. My husband and I are opening a coffee[...]

October 22nd, 2010 - 9:00 am § in Around Town, Mexico, Tips & Resources

Combat Mosquitoes with Karate Moves

Sweet blood. That’s always been the reason people tell me I frequently get bit by mosquitoes. I’d like to know how to turn it sour. Mosquitoes have been rampant here in northern Mexico for the past five months, and although the amount of them are decreasing as the colder weather approach[...]

October 18th, 2010 - 10:22 am § in Around Town, Looking for Opportunity, Nicaragua

Quarter-life Idealist

Greetings LaVida Idealist readers! I am a 24-year-old recent university graduate from Dallas, Texas with a degree in Latin American Studies. I decided about a month before graduation to plan a solo journey to Central America. Initially determined to find employment with an organization while traveli[...]

October 13th, 2010 - 2:51 pm § in Day in the Life, Mexico

Day in the Life: Bungee Fun

Skydiving, hang-gliding, multi-pitch climbing — check. Riding an unsafe pirate ship ride at a Mexican fair, forward flipping in a biplane, riding 100 mph in a drag car — check. Bungee jumping – no check. It was never on my list of things to do; I always thought it would be too scary. Even [...]

September 24th, 2010 - 11:10 am § in Around Town, Mexico, Tips & Resources, Volunteer

Skyping for School

“Back in my day, we had to send letters across the ocean and wait weeks to get a response,” says my pastor who lived in western Europe for 20 years as a missionary. I’ve got it good. Two thousand miles is bridged in seconds with Skype, a program often used by my husband and I [...][...]

September 10th, 2010 - 11:58 am § in Around Town, Culture, Mexico

Worlds Apart

I am poor by common U.S. standards. When friends and family give to me instead of me having to go to a second-hand shop, I find myself overjoyed. When they buy lunch or coffee for me and my husband, I am humbled. But that humility can turn sour. Sometimes, I feel like a moocher, a [...][...]

August 6th, 2010 - 9:53 am § in Around Town, Culture, Mexico

Pennyless

Pets are not people, not more worthy of life than humans. I distinctly remember experiencing reverse culture shock to an extreme when I came home for a quick vacation during my teaching stint in Honduras. Fresh off the plane, I went to one of my brother’s lacrosse games. I overheard person aft[...]

July 23rd, 2010 - 6:00 pm § in Around Town, Culture, Day in the Life, Mexico

Cultural Portals

Historical mystery taints certain places and events in life. In any ancient country, there are mystical places that transport us back before our ancestors were alive. Of course, time’s fingerprint is evident in the fallen temples and ruins — but time can never rid the effects of such places.[...]

July 20th, 2010 - 10:37 am § in Around Town, In the Field, Mexico, Volunteer

How Much Difference Did I Really Make After 5 Months of Teaching English?

Jon Clarke likes to play with words, understand people, and vice-versa.  He’s English, and this manifests itself through an uncontrollable desire to have a nice cup of tea whenever possible.  Global wanderings have taken him all over the place, nodding and smiling in a variety of different i[...]





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